PBBM: NO LETUP IN ANTI-DRUGS CAMPAIGN BUT POLICY WILL FOCUS ON DISMANTLING SYNDICATES, REEDUCATION
Dateline Kamuning:
There is no letup in the government campaign against illegal drugs, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. said Thursday, adding that policy changes in the strategy will now focus more on dismantling drug syndicates and strengthening reeducation programs.
“We have taken enforcement as far as we can. Now, it is
time to look at actually going after dismantling these syndicates,” Marcos said
during a question-and-answer session held at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS) in Washington.
Marcos said he cannot speak in behalf of his
predecessor’s anti-drug campaign or “what he had in mind” but acknowledged its
rallying point that illegal drugs, “continues to be at the source of many… much
criminality in the Philippines.”
“We have [to] try to identify the key areas where we
have… to tackle, the key areas that we have to attend to so that we can see a
diminution of the activity of the drug syndicates,” Marcos said.
President Marcos said he has organized a commission and
asked for the resignation of all the police officers suspected of involvement
in the illegal drug trade.
Marcos revealed they have received about 917 resignations
from police officers from colonel level.
“And we are now in the process of looking through the
records of these officers to see those have had derogatory comments, those that
have evidence against them,” he said.
The President earlier vowed to build a strong case against Philippine National Police (PNP) officials involved in the illegal drug trade.
Marcos said it was part of his campaign pledge to carry
out a different approach to the country’s drug problem, as he stressed his
efforts to clean the ranks of the PNP. (PND)
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